Thursday, October 08, 2015

American Hero who Stopped a Terrorist Attack on a French Train Stabbed Multiple Times.

One of American heroes, Spencer Stone, who stopped a terrorist attack, when him and two other Americans subdued a gunman on a Paris-bound train in August, was stabbed multiple times early hours of Thursday in Sacramento. But he is in a stable condition.

It is believed the incident have no connection to terrorism but 'more of being at the wrong place at the wrong time.'


USA Today is reporting "It is believed that the victim was out with a group of friends when a physical altercation led to the victim being stabbed multiple times in his upper body," the statement said. "Detectives were called to the scene to assist with the investigation and the victim is currently being treated for what appears to be non-life threatening injuries."

"Everybody send prayers out to the Stone family today," tweeted Alek Skarlatos, a friend of Stone who also helped stop the terror attack.

The Sacramento police department said on Facebook that the victim was stabbed repeatedly in his upper body.

Ayoub El-Khazzani, 25, was arrested in the incident on the French train. French authorities identified him as a Moroccan with ties to radical Islam who may have traveled to Syria.

The three Americans, hailed as heroes, said they acted out of instinct and were ready to fight to death to stop the attack.

Stone, 23, longtime friends Skarlatos, 22, an Oregon National Guardsman, and Anthony Sadler, 23, a student at Sacramento State University, were on the high-speed train from Amsterdam to Paris when El-Khazzani — armed with a Kalashnikov, an automatic Luger pistol and a box cutter — raced through the car. The men tackled and subdued the gunman, who was taken into custody in France.

"We just kind of acted, there wasn't much thinking going on," Stone said at a news conference in Paris days after the attack. He said he acted out of "survival — and for my friends and everybody else on the train."

Stone said he was stabbed in the neck and thumb, which had to be reattached. "He seemed like he was ready to fight to the end," Stone said of El-Khazzani. "So were we."

Stone earned a Purple Heart and Airman's Medal in a Pentagon ceremony, Skarlatos is receiving the Soldier’s medal, and Sadler was issued a civilian award.

President Obama hosted the three men at the White House last month, saying they represented "the very best of America and the American character."

"They were thinking they were just going to have a fun reunion in Paris and ended up engaging in a potentially cataclysmic situation," Obama said. "Because of their courage, because of their quick thinking, because of their teamwork, it's fair to say a lot of people were saved, and a real calamity was averted."

Skarlatos may have averted tragedy himself in recent days. He is participating in the TV show "Dancing With The Stars" and other activities that he said kept him from enrolling at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Ore., this fall. Last week 10 people died at the school in a shooting rampage.

"I would have been there today," he said on the "The Ellen DeGeneres Show." "I had classes picked out and everything."




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